Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-fscjk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T14:48:39.219Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Seasonal changes in the mineral compositions of tropospheric dust in the industrial region of Upper Silesia, Poland

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2018

M. Jablonska*
Affiliation:
Faculty of Earth Sciences, University of Silesia, Bedzinska 60, 41-200 Sosnowiec, Poland
J. Janeczek
Affiliation:
Faculty of Earth Sciences, University of Silesia, Bedzinska 60, 41-200 Sosnowiec, Poland
F. J. M. Rietmeijer
Affiliation:
Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, MSC03-2040, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87131-0001, USA
*

Abstract

The tropospheric dust loading in Upper Silesia (Poland) shows a steady, annually averaged supply of minerals from natural and anthropogenic sources, industrial dust emitters, domestic heating, transportation, but with superimposed seasonal changes for some dust types. Samples of airborne and deposited particles were collected at monthly intervals between 1996 and 2001 in several cities of Upper Silesia. Dust samples were examined by X-ray powder diffraction, analytical transmission electron microscopy, analytical scanning electron microscopy, and electron microprobe microanalysis. The most common dust included quartz, gypsum, coke, soot, hematite, magnetite, wüstite, bassanite, graphite and various K-, Fe- and Mg-bearing aluminosilicates, in order of decreasing abundance. Minor phases included α-iron, sulphur, sphalerite, halite, sylvite, hercynite, franklinite, baryte, dolomite, ankerite, apatite, olivine and feldspars. Quartz, and specific industrial minerals, e.g. spinels, sphalerite, olivine and iron, occurred throughout the year in almost constant abundances. The amounts of all other dust components show seasonal variations; gypsum, baryte and other sulphates are particularly abundant in winter. In general, minerals related to low-emission sources are abundant in the winter time, while both natural dusts and dust from high-emission sources are predominant during the summer.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 2003

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bajor, R., Sosnowska, M. and TyczynsM, A. (2001) The pollution of atmosphere in the Silesian Province in the years 1999-2000. Yearbook of the Regional Sanitary-Epidemiol ogical Station, Katowice (in Polish).Google Scholar
Bajor, R., Sosnowska, M. and TyczynsM, A. (2002) The pollution of atmosphere in the Silesian Province in the years 2000-2001. Yearbook of the Regional Sanitary-Epidemiol ogical Station, Katowice (in Polish).Google Scholar
Cimander, B., Sosnowska, M. and Tyczynski, A. (1998) The air pollution in the Katowice voivodeship in the years 1996-1997. Yearbook of the Regional Sanitary-Epidemiol ogical Station, Katowice (in Polish).Google Scholar
Cimander, B., Sosnowska, M. and Tyczynski, A. (1999) The pollution of atmosphere in the Silesian Province in the years 1997-1998. Yearbook of the Regional Sanitary-Epidemiol ogical Station, Katowice (in Polish).Google Scholar
Cimander, B., Sosnowska, M. and Tyczynski, A. (2000) The pollution of atmosphere in the Silesian Province in the years 1998-1999. Yearbook of the Regional Sanitary-Epidemiol ogical Station, Katowice (in Polish).Google Scholar
Hulett, L.D. and Weinbereger, AJ. (1980) Some etching studies of microstructure and composition of large aluminosilicate particles in fly ash from coal-burning power plants. Environmental Science and Technology, 14, 965970.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jablonska, M. and Janeczek, J. (2000) Phase composi-tion of atmospheric dust collected at different heights. Ada Mineralogia — Petrographica, Szeged, XLI, Supplement B.Google Scholar
Jablonska, M., Rietmeijer, F.J.M. and Janeczek, J. (2001) Fine-grained barite in coal fly ash from the Upper Silesian Industrial Region. Environmental Geology, 40, 941948.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Klein, C. (1993) Rocks, minerals, and a dust world. Pp. 759 in: Health Effects of Mineral Dusts (Guthrie, G.D. and Mossman, B.T., editors). Reviews in Mineralogy, 28. Mineralogical Society of America, Washington, D.C.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Manecki, A. (1984) Transport and input of air pollutants in the Niepolomice forest area. Pp. 3568 in: Forest Ecosystems in Industrial Regions (Grodziriski, W., Weiner, J. and Maycock, P.F., editors). Springer-Verlag, Berlin, Heidelberg, New York, Tokyo.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Novakov, T., Chang, S.G. and Harker, A.B. (1974) Sulfates as pollution particulates: catalytic formation on carbon (soot) particles. Science, 186, 259261.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Parzentny, H.R. (1995) The Effect of Inorganic Mineral Matter on the Concentration of Selected Trace Elements in Coal from the Upper Silesian Coal Basin. The Silesian University Press, Katowice.(in Polish).Google Scholar
Pastuszka, J.S. (2001) Exposure of the general population living in the Upper Silesian Industrial Zone to the particulate, fibrous and biological (bacteria and fungi) aerosols. Scientific Papers of the Institute of Environmental Protection Engineering of the Wroclaw University of Technology, 73, 131 pp.Google Scholar
Pastuszka, J.S., Kolarczyk, J. and Sztyler, A. (1989) Preliminary studies of elemental carbon mass size distribution in Katowice. Journal of Aerosol Science, 20, 12651268.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pastuszka, J.S. Hlawiczka, S. and WiUeke, K. (1993) Particulate pollution levels in Katowice, a highly industrialized Polish city. Atmospheric Environment, 27B, 5965.Google Scholar
Pueschel, F.R. (1976) Aersosol formation during coal combustion: condensation of sulfates and chlorides on fiyash. Geophysical Research Letters, 3, 651653.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rietmeijer, F.J.M. and Janeczek, J. (1997) An analytical electron microscope study of airborne industrial particles in Sosnowiec, Poland. Atmospheric Environment, 31, 19411951.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rutkowski, J.D. (1995) Current problems of effective protection of atmospheric air. Protection of Environment, 2, 1114.(in Polish).Google Scholar
A., Strugala (1998) Mineral substance in coal and their transformation during coking process. Economy of Mineral Resources, 14, 528.Polish Academy of Science, Krakow, in Polish).Google Scholar
Szymanska-Kubicka, L., Nowakowski, B., Szymidla, A. and Zbrojkiewicz, R. (2001) Conditions of environ¬ment in the Silesian Province in 1999-2000. Pp. 49108 in: The Air. Library of Environmental Monitoring, Voivod of Silesian Province and Province Inspectorate of Environmental Protection, Katowice, Poland (in Polish).Google Scholar